19 answers

Seeking Advice on Why 16-Month Old Daughter Refuses to Eat

Hi Mamas,

My 16-month old daughter has been on a eating strike, she will not eat anything but fruit, yogurt, cheese and snacks. She will sometimes eat chicken nuggets but only the Mickey Mouse ones that we buy at Costco because it's Organic. She hates veggies now but would love it before and had no problems eating it. She has become the pickiest eater! I am so frustrated and I am so tired of trying to force her to eat. She is definitely a snacker and will snack all day but she loves her strawberries, grapes and banana.

Does anyone have the same issue? Is this a phase that she is going through? I get so upset with her when she refuses the food I make for her, I even tried hiding her veggies and she spits it out. Any advice?

Thank you so much.

3 moms found this helpful

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

HI,

Snacking is good, they call it grazing. Dr. Sears has a great book about kids nutrition. Her snacking sounds healthy, I wouldn't worry so much and don't force her to eat.

2 moms found this helpful

Hi Y.: Leave her be. When my son was 16 months old, he went through a similar phase. He would not eat meet of any kind. All he would eat was peanut putterveggies, fruit and sometimes I could get him to eat an egg. He grew out of it on his own. At every meal, I would put all the food on his plate and let him eat what he wanted. Eventually he went back to eatting everything. The trick is don't make a fuss.
M.

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More Answers

Hi Y.: Leave her be. When my son was 16 months old, he went through a similar phase. He would not eat meet of any kind. All he would eat was peanut putterveggies, fruit and sometimes I could get him to eat an egg. He grew out of it on his own. At every meal, I would put all the food on his plate and let him eat what he wanted. Eventually he went back to eatting everything. The trick is don't make a fuss.
M.

2 moms found this helpful

She's normal.
Keep in mind that a child's taste buds are still developing... at this age and even older, they are still tasting things and sometimes it is just overwhelming. Most kids have preferences, and are then seen as picky.

My son is picky. My daughter is not. My daughter "used to" LOVE cherry tomatoes... she would just plop them in her mouth one after another. But now, she does not like them. Fine. No biggie. She has other preferences now. This will happen ALL throughout childhood... so just get used to it.

It does not have to be frustrating or about 'forcing' a child to eat. A child will not eat if forced. It is a losing battle. Eating should be fun and enjoyable. Your daughter IS eating... just not want you want her to at this time. Just remember that it is temporary and a phase. Then other food phases will occur too. So, we just have to learn to ebb and flow with it. She will not starve. Or you can supplement her diet with kids vitamins.

Now, children also have different eating 'styles.' My daughter for example WILL eat all at one sitting at meal time. BUT my son is a 'grazer.' Meaning, he will eat only small amounts all throughout the day. He will simply NOT eat if he is not hungry. He knows his tummy and his hunger cues. THAT is good. We encourage that. It is healthy. I don't consider him a 'snacker' but rather a little boy who knows himself. It's fine. My Mom (grandma) however, will literally nag him to eat if SHE feels he is not eating the amount that SHE feels is enough. It is so irritating and I do not like it. A child should not be 'forced' to eat... they will eat when they are hungry. My Mom however, thinks a child should eat like an adult. But that is not true. My son, even though he is a 'picky' eater and a 'grazer' is very healthy and grows like a weed and is very well developed. So, I don't worry about 'how' he eats... rather, I feed him according to how I know he is. Less stressful that way.

Don't start stressed out eating 'rules' and habits now... or food battles. It will not work. It only causes more problems and stalemates. Not pleasant at all. Just make it fun, offer her things, but if she does not or will not eat it, fine. Move on. Its okay. She will not starve.

In a few months, her food preferences will change again.
As long as she is growing fine and her development is normal and her weight is normal and the Doctor is not concerned, I would not worry about it. Food quirks like this happens ALL the time. Believe me.

My son, can find and pick out the most tiniest food particle in a dish if he does not like it, and he will pick it out, or just reject it. NOTHING can pass his eyes or taste buds. NOTHING can be snuck passed him. Just don't force it, don't fight about it... or it will backfire. Kids change their eating preferences all the time. And, I don't believe in using food as a punishment either. It's just not that big of a deal to do so.

If you start having food battles with her now, and fight about it... then later it will only get worse and she will 'learn' that eating is just not fun, not enjoyable, not healthy, not pleasant, not anything to look forward to and then it will become the bane of activities for BOTH of you, always.

Also, when you feed her, don't fill up the whole plate. Kids, get overwhelmed with a full plate of food that could feed an adult. Just offer her a tablespoon of stuff. That is enough. And just a couple of choices in her plate. My daughter, if I fill up her plate too much or put too many choices on her plate, she won't touch it... and she will literally tell me its too overwhelming. So, I learned my lesson AND I LET her give me feedback on it. No problem.

Anyway well just some thoughts. Didn't mean to ramble. But, really, this is normal. ALL kids do this. But pick your battles.

All the best,
Susan

2 moms found this helpful

HI,

Snacking is good, they call it grazing. Dr. Sears has a great book about kids nutrition. Her snacking sounds healthy, I wouldn't worry so much and don't force her to eat.

2 moms found this helpful

Hi Y.,
This is pretty normal behavior for a 16 month old. Don't let the food thing stress you out. Making food an issue and a fight will only cause eating problems later and your daughter will eat when she's hungry and try new things when she's ready. Your daughter will always win a food battle because she has all the control over what goes in her mouth. It sounds like your daughter eats healthy snacks (my niece would only eat chocolate, my friend's son would only eat McDonald's french fries)so that is good. My mother says, "No one ever got fat eating grapes and bananas!" She is getting her protein from the cheese and yogurt and milk. Keep trying to introduce new things - maybe avocado, cherry tomatoes, etc., things kids like - eventually she will eat something new. Give her a daily vitamin if you are concerned about that.

The other night my son announced that he was not eating dinner no matter which restaurant we were going to. I said, "ok, don't eat." We got to the restaurant and he ordered an appetizer (which he ate along with bread and butter), a dinner (he ate half of his and ate half of mine), then ate deseert. I didn't make a big deal of it so my son didn't and he ate. (My husband would have automatically started a fight and no one would have enjoyed dinner...)

I hope this helps! It sounds like you're doing great.

2 moms found this helpful

If I could type this in big bold red letters, I would, A PARENT CAN NEVER WIN FOOD BATTLES! Food intake is one of the few things your child can control. At 16 months she is starting to experiance her own autonomy and desire to have some power in her own life. Give her as many limited choices as you can; such as when getting dressed, ask her if she would like a dress or pants, the green shirt or the blue one; would she like a book read to her or play time; a bath or a shower....the more things she feels she controls in her own day, the less she will struggle to control food. The best thing you can do is NOT make an issue out of it. Put the food on her plate, give her time to eat, clear the table when the family is finished. Beleive me, she will not let herself starve.
Good luck with your angle! L.

1 mom found this helpful

I think it's just part of being a toddler...they're trying to exert their independence and test boundaries. They want to see how you react. I have a 15-month old and one day he likes something and the next he hates it. I don't press it. I offer him a well-balanced meal and he eats what he eats. I have noticed that if it is something that I am eating or it is on my plate, then he is all over it. Sometimes I will make extra and be eating it before I set my son down to eat. He'll see me "snacking" on it and want a taste...then I've got him hooked and he'll gobble it up for dinner. I'll also offer him a choice. I'll hold up two things and let him "pick" what he wants to eat. Also, toddlers eat their "best" at breakfast and then it diminishes throughout the day, so dinner becomes the most challenging. A few things that a friend recommended to me that are going over big with my son (all of these I buy at Trader Joe): garden/veggie patty that he dips in organic ketchup or ranch dressing, spanikopita, hummus (use crackers, pita bread, and/or cheese for dipping). I also buy the organic veggies and then saute them in a little bit of butter with a tiny bit of salt and pepper. He loves the veggies best cooked this way. Just keep trying and relax...you're sweet girl will come around. Good luck!

1 mom found this helpful

Our daughter was the same way and still is a little bit. She is 21 mos. It is a phase that they go through. Our daughter was the same as your daughter were she loved to eat when she was younger, but now is so picky. We had talked with her doctor and he told us not to force her to eat anything. Our daughter will graze throughout the day. Which is fine because she is getting enough to eat. She is still picky about what she eats but has gotten better about what she eats.

I know it is hard but try not to worry too much. If she is acting normal ie playing, sleeping, etc then she is fine. You really don't want to force her to eat anything because that can make the problem worse. Toddlers want to be able to control theirselves and through food is one way that they can do that. All you can do is try and offer her things she wants to eat and mix in some stuff that she may try.

I found a really helpful article in the Parenting magazine from the current issue. Good luck

1 mom found this helpful

She's eating healthy so don't sweat it. However, there are books in the library that show how to make little things out of veggies that may appeal to her.

If you're really concerned, you can disguise veggies in foods like smoothies.

Also, you may want to consider planting some veggies in a garden with her. It may make things like cherry tomatoes, strawberries, green beans, lettuce, etc. more appealing!

1 mom found this helpful

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